Nearly lost among the rolling hills
and fields of southwestern Iowa is the tiny town of
Villisca; a quiet, peaceful place of only a few hundred
people --- and one tragic and enduring mystery. It was
here, in June 1912, that a horrific mass murder took
place, wiping out an entire family. The murder was never
solved, casting a pall over Villisca that still lingers
today.
And this dark cloud may not be the only
thing still lingering here. There are many who believe
that the spirits of the murdered family may still remain
here as well, their ghosts haunting the old house where
they once lived and tragically died.
I happen to be one of the people who believe that and
if you had the chance to experience what I did at this
house in May 2005 --- you might be one of the believers
too.

Villisca is located in a remote corner
of Iowa, far off the modern interstate and a good distance
from any town that might have a population of more than
a couple of thousand souls. It's an isolated place,
accessible by only an old, two-lane highway and, believe
it or not, this is in great contrast to how it was back
in the early 1900's. In those days, Villisca, which
means "pleasant view", was a booming town
of more than 2,500 residents. The streets were lined
with flourishing businesses and several dozen trains
pulled into town everyday. It was a popular spot in
Montgomery County in those days, offering not only stores
and shops of just about every kind but restaurants and
a theater as well.
BY TROY
TAYLOR ARTWORK
RICARDO PUSTANIO
Villisca was a close-knit
community in those days but the peacefulness here was
shattered on June 10, 1912 with the discovery of eight
bloody corpses in a house along one of the town's tree-lined
streets. The J.B. Moore family, respected and well-liked
members of the community, along with two overnight guests,
were found murdered in their beds. And now, more than
90 years later, the crimes remain unsolved.
What happened on that dark
night in Villisca? And what occurred to cause at least
some of the spirits of this terrible crime to stay behind
in this world?
Bloody Murder
It was a warm evening in southwestern Iowa and the town
of Villisca stirred quietly in the gloom of the setting
sun. The dinner hour had long since passed and many
residents escaped to the cool of the front porch after
the heat of the day started to settle. Stores locked
up for the evening and lights began to appear in the
windows of homes along the darkening streets. At the
Presbyterian Church, music filtered to the street outside,
along with laughter and polite applause. The Children's
Day Program came to an end around 9:30 p.m. and soon
the parishioners began trickling out into the street,
heading home for the night.
Sarah Moore, who had coordinated the program, gathered
her family around her as they started walking home.
She was joined by her husband Josiah, known popularly
in town as J.B., and her children, Herman, Catherine,
Boyd and Paul. Two young girls, friends of the Moore
children who had also been in the evening's program,
Lena and Ina Stillinger, came home with the Moore's
to spend the night.
The following morning, June 10, Mary Peckham, the Moore's
next door neighbor, stepped out of the back door of
her home to hang some laundry on the line. As Mary worked,
some times passed and she realized that not only
had the Moore's not been outside to start their own
chores that morning but that the house itself seemed
unusually still. This was very strange as J.B. Moore
always left early for work and Sarah was always up at
dawn to start breakfast and the day's work. The Moore
house was full of young children and so the morning
hours were always loud and boisterous. Could the Moore's
be sick? Mary waited for a few more minutes and then
approached the house and knocked on the door. It was
still eerily quiet inside. She waited for a few moments
and then knocked again. Once more, there was no answer
and so she tried to open the door, thinking that she
could poke her head inside and call for Sarah. She pulled
on the door handle though and found that it was locked
from the inside.
Mary did go out to the small barn behind the Moore house
and let the chickens out into the yard. She felt it
was the least she could do to help Sarah, who she was
convinced must be under the weather. After she let out
the chickens, Mary went back into her own house but
the more she thought about the silent home next door,
the more that she worried. Finally, when she could stand
it no more, she placed a telephone call to J.B.'s brother,
Ross Moore, and he promised to come over as soon as
he could. This was the first step in what would turn
out to be one of the most bungled criminal investigations
of the era.
When Ross Moore arrived at the home of his brother,
he was met by Mary Peckham, who had continued to try
and raise someone in the neighboring home. Ross tried
the door himself and then leaned up to peer into a bedroom
window. It was too dark to see anything, so he returned
to the door, banging on it and shouting for his brother
and sister-in-law. There was still no answer, so he
produced his own set of keys and looked through the
ring until he found one that opened the front door.
As he pushed open the door, Moore stepped into the parlor
with Mary Peckham behind him. Moore looked around, seeing
no one in the kitchen. He called out but there was no
answer. On the opposite side of the parlor was a doorway
that went into one of the children's bedrooms. He carefully
opened the door and looked into the room. He nearly
cried out when he saw two bloody bodies on the bed and
dark stains on the sheets. Moore never even looked to
see who was lying there. He ran back to the porch and
shouted for Mary Peckham to call the sheriff --- someone
had been murdered!
The City Marshall, Hank
Horton, arrived a short time later and searched the
house. The two bodies in the downstairs bedroom were
Lena Stillinger, age 12, and her sister, Ina, age 8.
The girls were houseguests of the Moore children. They
had come home with them after the church program the
night before. The remaining members of the Moore family
were found in the upstairs bedrooms. Every person in
the house had been brutally murdered, their skulls crushed
with an ax. The victims included Josiah Moore, age 43;
Sarah Montgomery Moore, age 44; Herman, age 11; Catherine,
age 10; Boyd, age 7; Paul, age 5; and the Stillinger
sisters.
| Almost
as soon as the murders were discovered, the
news of the massacre traveled quickly throughout
Villisca. As friends, neighbors and curiosity
seekers descended on the Moore house, the
town's small police force quickly lost control
of the crime scene. It has been said that
literally hundreds of people walked through
the house, staring at the bodies, touching
everything and even taking souvenirs before
the Villisca National Guard unit arrived at
noon to close off the scene and secure the
home for state police investigators. It's
easy for us now to blame this disastrous mismanagement
on local police officers but in 1912, such
a crime still would have been much more difficult
to solve than it would be today. At that time,
fingerprinting was still a new idea, crime
scene photographs were rarely taken and DNA
testing would be unimaginable for decades
to come. |

A
newspaper photograph of the Moore family at
the time of the murders. (Courtesy of Darwin
& Martha Linn) |
In short, investigators
in rural areas like this simply did not see crimes of
this magnitude in 1912. In spite of this, the investigators
did manage to make some notes of the scene or all of
the clues would have been completely lost. As it was
though, any evidence left in the house was likely destroyed.
Thanks to this, the murders
remain unsolved to this day.
Blood
On Their Hands?
While no one was ever convicted of the Moore / Stillinger
murders, there was never any shortage of suspects in
the case. In the days that followed the crime, there
were at least four suspects mentioned in every edition
of the newspaper. However, leads were quickly exhausted,
alibis were established and possibilities began to dwindle.
The local police, state investigators, private detectives
who were hired, and even amateur detectives looking
for the reward that had been offered combed the town
and the surrounding region, following every clue that
was presented. Dozens of theories were pursued but each
time the investigation seemed to be getting close to
something, it all fell apart again. As time wore on,
the possibility of solving the crime began to fade and
eventually, the trail went cold.
Today, historians, and those with an interest in the
case, have their own ideas of who committed the murders.
There are many who believe the killer was a local man,
who was known to the victims, while others believe a
deranged preacher, a traveling hobo or dangerous serial
killer was responsible for the deaths of the Moore's
and the Stillinger girls. The leading suspects included:

Frank F. Jones
(Courtesy of Darwin & Martha Linn) |
-
Frank F. Jones,
a prominent Villisca resident and state
Senator. J.B. Moore worked for Jones for several
years until he opened his own implement company
in 1908. According to many residents, Jones
was extremely upset that Moore left his employ
and managed to take the very lucrative John
Deere franchise with him. Jones was undoubtedly
the most powerful man in town during this
era and it's not likely that he would have
suffered what he considered a "defeat" lightly.
But would this have been enough to murder
Moore and his family? Some believe that matters
were made even worse by the fact that J.B.
Moore was engaged in an affair with Jones'
daughter-in-law, Dona. Although no actual
evidence of any affair exists, it was a rumor
that was going around at the time of the murders.
This may have enraged not only Jones but his
son, Albert, as well. |
| -
William Mansfield
was the man believed to have carried out the
crimes for Jones. After the Burns Detective
Agency from Kansas City got involved in the
case, their detective in charge, James Newton
Wilkerson, became convinced that Jones was
involved in the murders. He openly accused
Frank and Albert Jones of hiring a man named
William Mansfield to carry out the crime.
He believed that J.B. Moore was supposed to
be the only target but Mansfield had killed
everyone in the house instead. Neither of
the Jones' was ever arrested and both of them
vehemently denied any connection to the killings.
Mansfield
came from Blue Island, Illinois. Wilkerson
believed that Mansfield, who was also known
under the aliases of George Worley and Jack
Turnbaugh, was a cocaine fiend and a killer
who was also responsible for other murders.
His investigation revealed that all of these
murders were committed in precisely the same
manner, which led him to believe that one
man was responsible for all of them. Wilkerson
managed to convince a grand jury to open an
investigation in 1916 and Mansfield was arrested
and brought to Montgomery County from Kansas
City. However, the accused managed to produce
payroll records that showed that he was in
Illinois at the time of the Villisca murders.
Without any other evidence, Mansfield was
released. |

William Mansfield
(Courtesy of Darwin & Martha Linn) |
-
Reverend George Kelly,
a traveling preacher, became another prime suspect in
the murders. Kelly was described as a "spidery
little man" with protruding ears, a prominent nose,
high forehead and a wide mouth with large lips that
seemed to turn down at the corners even when he smiled.
People recalled his dark eyes and were disconcerted
by his mannerisms. He was easily excited and often ranted
and spoke so fast that he was sometimes impossible to
understand. He was also said to drool excessively and
sprayed spit all over those who were close to him when
he talked.

Reverend George Kelly
(Courtesy of Darwin & Martha Linn) |
Kelly
and his wife settled in Macedonia, Iowa in
1912 after several years of preaching throughout
the Midwest. He continued as an itinerant
preacher and was present at the Children's
Day program at the Presbyterian Church on
the night of the murders. His presence here,
and his departure from town during the early
morning hours on June 10, made him a prime
suspect in the killings. It was also said
that the minister confessed to the crime on
the train going back to Macedonia and that
he had committed the murders because he had
a vision that told him to "slay and slay utterly",
a phrase that allegedly came from the Bible.
Before his "confession" though, Kelly wrote
a number of letters to the authorities about
the Moore / Stillinger deaths. In the letters,
Kelly appeared to be obsessed with the murders
and supposedly wrote things that only the
killer would know. His uttering on the train
("slay and slay utterly") was said to have
been overheard by witnesses and he spoke to
other passengers about the killings --- before
they were even reported, some said. True or
not, Kelly did send a bloody shirt to the
laundry in Council Bluffs but it was never
recovered. |
In 1914, Kelly was arrested
but not for the murders. He was jailed in South Dakota
for sending obscene materials through the mail and was
sentenced to prison. Instead, he ended up in a mental
hospital in Washington D.C. By 1917 though, suspicions
had fallen onto Kelly in Iowa and he was arrested for
the Moore / Stillinger murders. Kelly supposedly rambled
a nearly incoherent confession and the fact that it
was accepted at all had led some to call this a "mockery
of law enforcement practices at the time". Kelly withdrew
the confession before his trial began. His first trial
resulted in a hung jury and he was finally acquitted
by the second.
- Andy Sawyer: Despite
what many believed was strong evidence against some
of the principals in the case, detectives were unable
to ignore other similar murders that occurred in the
Midwest around the same time as the Villisca murders.
There remains a very strong possibility that a serial
killer, before anyone even knew what a "serial killer"
was, could have been at work during this time. Although
every hobo, transient and otherwise unaccounted for
stranger became a suspect in the Villisca murders at
one time or another, there were a few of these travelers
who stood out from the others. One of them was a man
named Andy Sawyer. Although no real evidence ever
linked Sawyer to the crime, his name was often mentioned
during the grand jury proceedings. He was fingered by
his boss on a railroad crew, who claimed that he seemed
to have more information about the murders that he should
have had. In addition, he slept with, and carried on
conversations with, his ax. Sawyer was arrested and
brought in for questioning but was apparently dismissed
as a suspect in the case when it was discovered that
police records had him in Osceola, Iowa on the night
of the murders. He was arrested for vagrancy and the
Osceola sheriff recalled putting him on a train out
of town at approximately 11:00 p.m. on the night of
June 9. Could he have still made it to Villisca to carry
out the murders that night? His railroad crew boss,
and the other nervous men on his crew, believed that
he could but his concerns were dismissed and Sawyer
vanished into history.
- Henry Moore (no
relation to the family) was perhaps the most likely
suspect in the "drifter" category. who was no relation
to the murdered family. Although accused of some of
the same crimes as William Mansfield, Moore was actually
convicted of ax murders a short time after the events
in Villisca. Some believe that he was responsible for
a bloody spree of murder that wreaked havoc across the
Midwest and included the murders of the Moore family
and Stillinger girls in Iowa. Moore was prosecuted in
December 1912 for the murder of his mother and maternal
grandmother in Columbia, Missouri. He had slaughtered
both of his victims with an ax and while this was horrific
enough, it was just the final act in a bloody rampage
that may have spanned 18 months, five states and more
than 20 murders. It is thought that the Villisca murders
were what finally put federal authorities on Moore's
trail.
| The
discovery of the killing spree might never
have been realized if authorities in Villisca
had not requested federal assistance in the
solution of their local massacre in June 1912.
The police had the savaged bodies of the Moore's
and the Stillinger girls but had no clues
or direction for their investigation. A federal
officer, M.W. McClaughry, was assigned to
the case and his investigation revealed that
the Villisca murders were not unique. Nine
months before, in September 1911, a similar
massacre had occurred in Colorado Springs,
taking the lives of H.C. Wayne, his wife and
child, and Mrs. A.J. Burnham and her two children.
A month later, in October, another massacre
claimed the lives of the Dewson family in
Monmouth, Illinois and then a little more
than a week later, the five members of the
Showman family of Ellsworth, Kansas were also
murdered in their beds. In every case, the
killer had broken into their homes late at
night and had killed everyone with an ax.
On June 5, 1912 --- just days before the carnage
in Villisca --- Rollin Hudson and his wife
were murdered in Paola, Kansas. The murders
were carried out in the same way as the earlier
crimes, and just as would occur a short time
later in Villisca. McClaughry was convinced
that a transient maniac was responsible for
all of the murders. And while he was a hard-working
investigator, it would be coincidence and
good luck that would point him in the direction
of Henry Moore. McClaughry's father was the
warden of the federal penitentiary at Leavenworth
and was a man with many contacts within the
prison system. When he heard about the case
of Henry Moore, who was serving a life sentence
in Missouri for the December 1912 murders
of his mother and grandmother, he informed
his son. After comparing the evidence in all
of the cases, capped by interviews with Moore,
McClaughry announced, on May 9, 1913, that
the books had been closed on 23 Midwestern
homicides. |

As the person guilty of the Villisca
Axe Murders was never arrested nor convicted,
the reward fund was used by the citizens of
Villisca to purchase gravestones for the Moore
family. |
Unfortunately, no one took
his findings seriously and most were happier to believe
that the real killer was Reverend George Kelly, who
had "confessed" to the Villisca murders. Kelly publicly
recanted as the trial approached and his ramblings seemed
to bolster pleas of mental illness. He was later acquitted
after two trials.
During all of the publicity
surrounding the trial, the information collected by
M.W. McClaughry had been largely forgotten. In spite
of this, McClaughry remained convinced of Moore's guilt
and always believed that he had solved the Villisca
murders.
Officially however, the case remains open to this day.
| A
vintage photograph of the Moore house
in the early 1900s |
A
photo from the back of the house in
June 2007 |
The
Moore kitchen, restored as closely
as possible to how it looked in 1912 |
| The
Moore house living room, again restored
as close to possible to how it looked
in 1912. There is no electricity or
indoor plumbing in the house, just
as it was at the time. |
The
downstairs bedroom known as the "blue
room", where the Stillinger girls
were murdered on the night of June
10, 1912 |
J.B.
and Sarah Moore's bedroom, located
at the top of the stairs on the second
floor. The couple was murdered in
their bed and the swing of the ax
left marks in the ceiling. |
| The
infamous closet door in the children's
bedroom on the second floor |
Author
Troy Taylor with Darwin & Martha
Linn (owners of the Ax Murder House)
in June 2007 |
The
twisting staircase that leads upstairs
from the kitchen. The same steps the
killer walked on June 10 |
|
The Haunting
of the Moore House
During the hours before dawn on June 10, 1912, a small
frame house in Villisca, Iowa became the site of one
of the grisliest massacres in Midwestern history when
the family of J.B. Moore and two overnight guests were
murdered as they slept. The house earned a place in
American crime history that morning and a place in the
annals of ghostly legend as well.
The house had many owners and tenants over the years
but in 1994, a real estate agent approached Darwin
and Martha Linn, local farmers, about the possibility
of them purchasing the house. At the time, the Linn's
already owned and operated the Olson-Linn Museum located
on Villisca's town square and they felt that purchasing
the house would give them the opportunity to preserve
more of the area's history. Because of its deteriorating
condition, the Moore house was in danger of being razed.
If the Linn's had not purchased it, it's likely that
it would have been destroyed. They soon set about obtaining
the necessary funds to restore the home to its condition
at the time of the murders in 1912.
Using old photographs, the Linn's began the renovation
work in late 1994. The restoration included the removal
of vinyl siding and the repainting of the original wood
on the outside, the removal of the enclosures on the
front and back porch, the restoration of an outhouse
and chicken coop in the backyard and the removal of
all of the indoor plumbing and electrical fixtures in
the house. The pantry in the original house had been
converted to a bathroom years before and this room was
now restored to its 1912 condition. Then, using testimony
and records from the coroner's inquest and grand jury
hearings, the Linn's placed furniture in approximately
the same places as it was located at the time of the
murders. Unfortunately, the furniture that had belonged
to the Moore's had vanished many decades ago but antiques
were used to replace what was lost.
The Moore home was added to the National Register of
Historic Places in 1998 and remains today as a colorful
time capsule of 1912, the ghastly murders that occurred
here and the mystery that followed. The walls of the
place hide many secrets ---- from the identity of the
murderer to just how he managed to carry out his dark
deeds without awakening the occupants of the house ----
and these secrets still bring many visitors to the door.
Some come looking for the history of the place but most
of them come looking for the ghosts.
Ever since the Moore house was opened to overnight visitors
several years ago, ghost enthusiasts, curiosity-seekers
and diehard paranormal investigators have come here
in droves, all seeking the strange, the unusual and
the haunted. Some have stayed here alone, like the Des
Moines disk jockey who awoke in the night to the sounds
of children's voices when no children were present.
Others have come in groups and have gone away with mysterious
audio, video and photographic evidence that suggests
something supernatural lurks within these walls. Tours
have been cut short by falling lamps, moving objects,
banging sounds and a child's laughter, while psychics
who have come here have claimed to communicate with
the spirits of the dead.
 |
If even a fraction
of the stories circulating about this place
were true, I reasoned when I first heard
about the so-called "Villisca Ax Murder
House", then this would have to be one of
the most haunted places in America. The
history of the place certainly provided
a possibility for the story of the haunting
to be true --- but was it? I would find
that out for myself in May 2005, when I
hosted an overnight stay at this legendary
house. What happened that night, which was
detailed in the book
So,
There I Was,
made me a believer when it comes to the
ghosts of this eerie old house.
But
is the Moore house in Villisca really haunted?
There are many who maintain that it's not.
They say that many people lived in the house
over the years and none of them ever mentioned
ghosts or mysterious activity. It was not
until the renovations began that visitors
began to say that strange events were occurring
within the walls of the "Ax Murder House".
|
Are these events merely
the products of overactive imaginations or wishful thinking?
That's what some would like you to believe but don't
be fooled --- and don't take my word for it either.
I have come to believe that
this house is haunted because of my own experiences
here. I hope the reader will reserve his own judgment
until the time comes when he can spend his own night
inside of this house. It's not a place for the faint
of heart but if you are looking for a place where you
might be able to experience paranormal phenomena on
your own, then search for Villisca, Iowa on the map
and make your own plans to step back in time to this
historic ---- and haunted --- place.
So,
There I Was... by Troy Taylor
& Len Adams.

For the Full Story of the Villisca Ax
Murder House --- including first-hand accounts of the
haunting --- see the book Click on the Book Cover for more info &
To Order! Ever wonder what happens "behind the
scenes" of paranormal investigations, ghost tours
and haunted overnights? Ever wonder what happens when
ghost hunters visit places that are so haunted that
even they get scared? If so, then delve into the further
adventures, and misadventures, of author Troy Taylor
and the American Ghost Society's Len Adams as they recount
their own personal experiences with ghosts, hauntings,
haunted places, ghost tours and more. Discover these
fascinating, often humorous and usually chilling first-hand
accounts of some of the most haunted places in America,
including the Villisca Ax Murder House, Eastern State
Penitentiary, the Illinois town of Alton - one of the
most haunted small towns in America, Lemp Mansion, Bell
Witch Cave, Myrtles Plantation, Waverly Hills Sanatorium
and many others! It's another look at the "confessions"
of ghost hunters and the perfect addition to your library!

Also See:
THE
HOUSE ON RIDGE AVENUE
The Hauntings & Horror of America's
Original "Most Haunted" House --
Or
Was it Really?

PLEASE
VISIT TROY TAYLOR'S WEBSITE HERE. www.prairieghosts.com

ORIGINAL
STORY: www.prairieghosts.com/villisca.html
© Copyright 2007 by Troy Taylor. All Rights Reserved.
STORY USED WITH PERMISSION - www.hauntedamericatours.com
- TROY TAYLOR www.prairieghosts.com © Copyright
2008
Troy Taylor
Troy Taylor is the author of 55 books about history,
hauntings and the unexplained in America and is the
founder and president of the “American Ghost Society”,
a national network of ghost hunters that collects accounts
of ghost sightings and haunted houses and uses investigative
techniques to track down evidence of the supernatural.
He is also the creator of the Haunted America Conference
(America’s original ghost conference) and the
owner of the Illinois & American Hauntings Tours,
which offers ghost tours in the Illinois cities of Alton,
Chicago, Decatur, Lebanon, Jacksonville, and Watseka,
and offers overnight excursions to haunted places all
over the country. He has appeared in newspaper and magazine
articles about ghosts and has also been fortunate enough
to be interviewed hundreds of times for radio and television
broadcasts about the supernatural. He has appeared in
a number of documentary films, several television series
and in one feature film about the paranormal. He also
the executive producer for the series Cringe, which
was created by the iClips Network. He and his wife,
Haven, currently reside in Central Illinois.
PLEASE
ALSO SEE: 20 QUESTIONS WITH TROY
TAYLOR HERE.
|